| Elliottville | |
|---|---|
| Map of Staten Island from 1853. Includes Elliottville and surrounding neighborhoods. | |
| Location | Staten Island, NY |
| Settled | 1839 |
Elliottville was a former neighborhood on Staten Island from the 1850s and continuing through to the mid-1870s. The area has since become part of the neighborhood of Livingston, which is located within West New Brighton, in the confines of Castleton in Staten Island, New York. The neighborhood of Elliottville remained a distinctive community from approximately 1840 to about 1890. Notable residents include Dr. Samuel Mackenzie Elliot, Francis George Shaw, and John Bard. [1] [2]
Elliottville was quite small, spanning around only twelve blocks on either side of a street that was later called Bard Avenue. The original owner of most of the land was a Scottish immigrant and eye surgeon named Dr. Samuel Mackenzie Elliott. [3] On this land he built tens of houses, most of them designed by William Ranlett. From this he preferred the name Elliottville for the enclave and the designation thus appears on a map from 1854. Some early residents had rejected the name, including resident John Bard, the son of William Bard, from whom Elliott had purchased land. Bard's name became attached to the main avenue. Over time, the neighborhood then became known as the Bard Avenue section of West New Brighton and later as the Bard Avenue neighborhood of Livingston. Most of these changes were because of developments within the neighborhood, such as a post office in West Brighton and a streetcar depot in the former Anson Livingston mansion. [4] [5]
Residents, along with others on Staten Island, those in Manhattan, and the rest of the nation considered Elliottville as an enclave that was quite distinct from the rest of Staten Island. Initially, Elliottville was largely populated by Dr. Elliott's patients, who would travel from other cities to receive treatment due to his national reputation. He would then rent out accommodations to them. Several former patients and their families relocated to Elliottville because of the scenic beauty of it, and they were convinced of the healthfulness of the location. There was also a ferry to Manhattan at the foot of Bard Avenue that was easy for residents to use. In addition to New England origins, residents shared a commitment to the abolition of slavery. [5] One prominent abolitionist who lived in the neighborhood, Sydney Howard Gay, was the editor of the National Anti-Slavery Standard. Through his Manhattan office, with the aid of Louis Napoleon, a free black man, he helped hundreds of fugitives from slavery escape to freedom. [6]
Many locals were transcendentalists devoted to social change, including wide-sweeping economic and political changes, as well as those rooted in philosophical and spiritual views. Observing beauty was important to American transcendentalism as was participating in moral action. Elliottville offered this natural beauty and offered an opportunity to live in harmony with it as well as with one's neighbors that an urban landscape couldn't. Many of these residents were connected to Brook Farm and were friends and admirers of Ralph Waldo Emerson. [7]
After the Civil War, the neighborhood was still considered an enclave, but the qualities the residents shared were more fluid. There was more social distinction based on achievement or wealth rather than shared origins or a devotion to social reform (although these reformers and New Englanders still made up the majority of residents). There was a general agreement that the residents were distinctive, and the neighborhood stood apart from the rest of Staten Island during the 1840s to the 1890s. However, references to the neighborhood in the local and national press changed over time. They went from an enclave of abolitionists to "the intellectual part of Staten Island," to "the Fifth Avenue" of Staten Island during this time. [8]
From 1840 to 1880, Elliottville was known for its rural beauty and easy access to a scenic coast where people swam and boated. Starting in the 1880s, heavy industry and a railroad freight line separated the community from the waterfront, and the water became polluted. By this time, New Jersey oil refineries across the Kill van Kull were destroying the air quality. The decline in quality of life in Elliottville was rapid and the community changed drastically. The estate properties were torn down, the land separated, and the environment became more consistent with other early-twentieth century suburban developments across Staten Island. [4]